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Published: 2007-06-03 11:09:47 +0000 UTC; Views: 23560; Favourites: 384; Downloads: 445
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Description
Deviant Guide: Good ResponsesMost deviants will think they already know how to answer a comment. Open the message center, click on one of those beloved little packages of joy, read about how much somebody loves (or hates) your work, and return an appropriate comment, whilst trying to seem like you’re the nicest person on earth. It seems like such a simple practice, right?
Wrong.
One day, a comment is going to appear in your inbox that you weren’t expecting. Something that requires just that little bit of extra effort that you’ve never had to deal with before. A comment that explores every your piece of art to depths and reaches emotions in you that you never knew existed. Critique.
Why Does It Concern Me?
Even during the shortest stay here, almost every deviant has come in contact with some form critique, maybe without even realizing it! Critique is everywhere in this community, and to survive for long here on deviantART, you’re going to have to get good at receiving critique.
How To Receive Critique
A good way to respond to a comment always involves asking yourself three simple questions, and receiving the critique positively:
Was the comment helpful?
How did it make you feel?
Is the advice going to change the way you next attempt your work?
By using these simple questions, you can not only encourage a deviant to return to your work, and give you the honor of more critique, you can further your own skills by receiving their comment the right way.
Whenever you next receive critique, ask yourself “WHI”, pronounced “why”. You’re going to ask “why” the user has given you the critique.
Was the comment helpful?
When you first look at a critique on your work, it’s often tempting to just automate a reply with a thank you and carry on.
However, you must use the critique in a way that is going to help you in a positive way. Asking yourself if the comment is helpful is a good place to start.
Look at the comment and answer the following questions, which all check to see if the comment is helpful or not:
Does the comment give reasoning for likes or dislikes?
If a comment doesn’t show you exactly what you’re done right or wrong, it’s often not very helpful. After all, how can one improve if they don’t know how?
Does the comment raise concerns in a polite way?
This is a touchy question to ask, as most people will first see critique as somebody whining about their work. However, you have to ask yourself honestly if the comment is written in a polite way. If the comment is too polite, the deviant may have watered down their concerns, but if the comment is too harsh, it’s going to make you angry. You need to make sure there is a balance.
Is it actually relevant?
Every so often, you will get a comment that really, has absolutely nothing to do with your work. If you feel it is not relevant, trying to adapt to their suggestions is going to leave you more confused. Make sure the comment actually means something to you and your piece.
How did it make you feel?
Now it’s time to actually start responding. A good critique on your work will leave you wanting more. As a golden rule of thumb, it’s important never to take a critique personally
If somebody posts a critique on your page that makes you angry and upset, responding to it right away will only make you tempted to carry that anger into your reply.
Ask yourself these questions before responding to any critique:
What emotion does the comment make you feel?
Does it make you happy, sad, angry, or joyous? Is there any reason that this emotion may make you tempted to be angry with the poster of the comment? If so, take a deep breath, and re-read that comment as many times as it takes to see the comment without any emotion, because surely, the best response will come without anger or flattery.
Are your feelings honest?
Is there any reason whatsoever that you may be shy to post what you really feel? If there is, stop before you post anything. A good response will never shy on any details, but instead will let them know your opinion on the matter, without being rude, or without making anything up.
A good response will start by outlining how their comment made you feel, without being over emotive.
Is the advice going to change the way you next attempt your work?
A good response will tell the poster how you feel about each comment they made. If you can justify a technique or part of your work that they disliked, tell them why you feel it should stay that way!
However, remember that passing everybody’s comments off this way will mean you never show any improvement. A good response will give all suggestions a go!
Ask yourself these questions:
Am I looking at this with a positive attitude?
Launching into a response and an action without a positive attitude will only result in heart-break. Make sure you’re committed to change, and that you really believe you can give it a go. If you don’t feel you can do it, just say so! A good response will be honest, because after all, the critique gave you nothing less.
Will I really give this a go?
If you say you’re going to give it a go, and you’ve decided that you’re honest about it, how long before you decide it’s too hard and you give up? Giving something a go, is giving it a fair run. Don’t be tempted to give up after one deviation or two. It takes any good artist years to refine his technique. It’ll take you just as long.
Do I know exactly what they mean?
If you don’t get a part of their critique, or don’t understand exactly how they want you to try something, ask! Too many people shy away when they don’t understand, and discount themselves from ever being able to pick up concepts slightly more difficult. Don’t ever be afraid to expand your knowledge. After all this is an art community and we’re all here to help each other get better!
Length
If the critique you’ve received is enormous, and your response isn’t even close to it, don’t fret! Quite often the best response require being succinct and to the point, and won’t be long at all!
Just because a response is short, doesn’t mean it’s not a good response, and vice versa for a long response. Length means nothing. It’s the content that counts.
Is That It Already?
You better believe it! Making good responses is really that easy! Just follow the steps provided, and you’re on your way to making responses that everybody is going to love you for.
Remember one important thing though: always be yourself. No matter what formula you use, nothing means more to a deviant than to receive an honest response from somebody who shows that they care about what they’ve just read.
Happy responding everybody!
Nathan (~kle0012 ) and Kitty (~kittysyellowjacket )
Related content
Comments: 111
ospreyCG [2007-06-23 05:32:58 +0000 UTC]
Wonderful guide - I'll keep some of these things in mind the next time I give, or receive a crit.
Thank you for taking the time to post this!
- MH
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risca-risca [2007-06-23 03:55:52 +0000 UTC]
Thank you very much. This is so helpful for everybody. By the way, I think we should spread this! What do you think if I translate it to Portuguese (Brazilian)?
Congratulations!
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bringbackart In reply to risca-risca [2007-07-08 17:36:34 +0000 UTC]
Absolutely! We'd be honored if you translated it, but please make sure you credit us properly, as we put a lot of time and effort into this! =]
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magdalene-sweet [2007-06-23 03:35:36 +0000 UTC]
Thank you for taking the time to create this.
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RennardX [2007-06-23 02:05:08 +0000 UTC]
This is very well written and you've covered all the points people should know and use. I'm kinda scared giving crits simply because it seems like most don't know how to react to it. Sad.
Congrats on the DD.
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komaru6 In reply to ??? [2007-06-22 23:55:25 +0000 UTC]
this is great! and so helpful! very nice guide. a definite favorite!
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traditionalevolution In reply to ??? [2007-06-22 23:02:42 +0000 UTC]
Thank you for taking the time to write this!
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Andy-Rev In reply to ??? [2007-06-22 20:58:05 +0000 UTC]
This was a very helpfull guide. I have some problems while writting responses/coments (I'm reading "good coments" right now) mainly because I don't know how the person I'm talking with is going to react, and the fact that my english is not that good makes me even shier. Now I think I'll feel more confident, thank you!
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mehronjoon [2007-06-22 20:56:42 +0000 UTC]
Pop this guide in the Terms of Service, sit back, and watch the far-reaching effects of politeness, awareness, and thoughtfulness transform the landscape
Have you got a "Guide to Leaving Good Comments"? Seems like there can never be too many of those. Mindfulness is really a necessary element of existence.
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simonsaz3 [2007-06-22 20:22:50 +0000 UTC]
This is pretty awesome... very well said. Thank you so much for sharing this! I think this needs to be read by more people on DA.
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pralinkova-princezna [2007-06-22 20:10:10 +0000 UTC]
This will be very helpful to many deviants and hopefully reduce the amount of comments saying just "it is cute". I admit writing them too sometimes - and yes, they are pleasant to hear, but I prefer some constructive ones - but I try to at least praise some aspect of the picture, if I don't see anything to give critique on. I don't understand all types of arts, but if I do, I try to give some recommendations, not just my feelings, but even knowledge if possible (e.g. there are some rules or tricks hot to make portraits..) Aynway, thanks for sharing this, one of the most deserved DDs ever.
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XenonXylophone [2007-06-22 19:59:19 +0000 UTC]
Everyone (and I mean EVERYONE) needs to read this now.
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C3zu [2007-06-22 19:48:15 +0000 UTC]
Really the main reason why good artist or people TRYING to become good artist leave deviantart is because of the lack of constructive comment.
I'm really glad to see this DD-ed (congrates mate!) seeing as most people would view the daily deviant section whenever they get on deviantart.
The better people review art the better deviantart will be.
Maybe to add a bit of humor to this guide, maybe you can have a little section on "how to spot a bad comment" or something. Just my two cents !
"OMG ED IS SO CUTE KAWAII ^_^!11!!one!"
haha cheers mate.
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Fiona-Maria In reply to ??? [2007-06-22 19:19:01 +0000 UTC]
This will be very helpful to me! Thankyou so much! ^^ I'm sometimes stuck when it comes to replying to things, but I don't think I've ever received one of those really long, detailed critiques yet. Though I'll remember this if I ever do! :3 And it's nice to know length doesn't matter. I always find I'll write what I want to say, and realise it's only a sentence or two. I might use the 'advanced critique' button sometime soon.
Excellent advice. Thanks and congrats on the DD!
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vaia [2007-06-22 19:10:45 +0000 UTC]
Nicely done!
Thanks very much for posting this, and congrats on the DD!
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the-final-I In reply to ??? [2007-06-22 18:43:02 +0000 UTC]
I don't like ing without commenting.
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Elswyth [2007-06-22 18:23:59 +0000 UTC]
Wow, I'm very glad that you took the time to think about this and write it up! It's very very helpful. I think that constructive criticisms and proper responses to them are lacking, so this is an exellent tutorial. Not only can it help with responding, but it can also be applied to giving proper critiques. I wish people would follow this more often, because as nice as it is, sometimes, "I love it!" is a little boring to read, and in some cases it may come off as insincere. I think if we all followed your WHI technique it could help deviant members grow and improve as artists.
Again, thank you very much for this. It's much appreciated! And I'll also keep this in mind next time I have to do a critique at school, cause I think it would work in real life situations, too! ^_~
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PearlPhoenix In reply to ??? [2007-06-22 17:59:23 +0000 UTC]
thank you so much for this
I've bitten people in the ass a lot for giving me irrelevant comments and such that don't apply to me...so I need to cool off a bit sometimes ha...because I have to realize not everyone knows my intent. Heck, sometimes, I don't realize I'm doing something wrong myself, that's where the good criticism actually helps me.
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ChaoticFox [2007-06-22 17:49:42 +0000 UTC]
If only more people understood the meaning of critique.
There could be great benefit in turning this tutorial around and learning how to make your comments meaningful and productive, by actually providing a critique.
Rather than the good ol' DA-standard:
"That's awesome!"
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AquaSplash [2007-06-22 17:13:10 +0000 UTC]
Ooooh I'm SO impressed with this. It told me loads of things I never knew before. ...
PFFT. Seriously - if you are an admin then stop wasting time and get on with the job that you're meant to be doing.
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PhoenixSparrow In reply to AquaSplash [2007-07-20 02:11:05 +0000 UTC]
XD
I agree. I glad I'm not the only one who found this pretty condescending.
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AquaSplash In reply to PhoenixSparrow [2007-07-20 11:54:57 +0000 UTC]
Wanna be friends?
No seriously, you're cool XD
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PhoenixSparrow In reply to AquaSplash [2007-07-20 13:05:47 +0000 UTC]
Aw, cheers! Thanks for the watch too (:
and sure, certainly XD
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AquaSplash In reply to PhoenixSparrow [2007-07-20 14:27:14 +0000 UTC]
Yaaay <---
Ignore teh hyperness
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ExplosionAnomaly In reply to AquaSplash [2007-06-22 17:29:25 +0000 UTC]
Excellent critique. I'm sure they benefited from it.
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AquaSplash In reply to ExplosionAnomaly [2007-06-22 19:17:36 +0000 UTC]
Bet they didn't even read it lol.
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fourleafedRover [2007-06-22 16:04:04 +0000 UTC]
At first I was thinking this was going to be stupid.
OMG NO WAY. Your talented at giving advice. This really is helpful. Congratulations on your hard work.
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Droneguard In reply to ??? [2007-06-22 15:37:09 +0000 UTC]
I like to comment, depending from "just" a Well done/Good job or such to a constructive comment, adding my point of view. Critique is always useful, cause it helps you out on perfecting your work, or change things if you agree with the comment to make your work better.
But sometimes when i have good intentions with my comment, some people bring out weird stabbing comments without any emoticon with it that shows their expression.
This makes it hard to see if the person is joking, angry or just serious
Anyway i like your guide, and it should prove quite usefull to people out there
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DarkenedStorm In reply to ??? [2007-06-22 15:13:00 +0000 UTC]
I love this concept in what you are saying.
Especially the "After all this is an art community and we’re all here to help each other get better!"
Many people shy away from this or just don't care.
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true-crystalwolf In reply to ??? [2007-06-22 15:12:59 +0000 UTC]
wow this is great found it really helpfull
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X-Chick In reply to ??? [2007-06-22 15:00:48 +0000 UTC]
There are a few people i know on DA that could benefit form reading this. well done.
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ZackF In reply to ??? [2007-06-22 14:21:30 +0000 UTC]
Nice guide! Criticism awareness is a great cause to get behind. I wrote a similar article for a small Oekaki community a while back when it was having problems with people not responding well to comments. If you're interested, here's a link to my article:
[link]
Unfortunately, since Art can involve so much emotional investment, it's always go to require some effort to respond well to criticism. But the benefits of criticism make that effort well worth it in the end.
Cheers!
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warisbeautiful In reply to ??? [2007-06-22 12:24:12 +0000 UTC]
thank you so much.. i believe there are many people who need to read this..
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Starlightie [2007-06-22 11:15:29 +0000 UTC]
This is a great guide... it almost makes me want to pick the advanced critique button... though I don't know... I get so personal with my work, and I have seen that some people just love tearing others to bits. I will get there though lol
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simen91 In reply to ??? [2007-06-22 10:27:47 +0000 UTC]
Awesome... next time, learn me ow to make good critiques... cause as u see, i suck at it
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CyprithTheCat [2007-06-22 10:14:19 +0000 UTC]
Well, maybe the part about the feelings when you read a critique should be more detailed. A good critique can hurt even if the writer is polite and doesn't want to hurt you. It is natural that you are angry in this moment because someone criticized your most beloved character or picture.
There are artists who can deal with this without problems but I had to learn it first. I think this is an important subject also for the people who get the angry responses. Critique is necessary to improve your work but there will be critique you don't like even if it is presented in a very polite way. However this critique has to be taken as serious as every other comment.
Like I said some artists can deal with it others cannot. If you get an angry response, don't start to fight and be calm. If the artist is serious with his work he will accept the critique sooner or later. It only needs some time to conquer his own proud or something like that.
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JimField In reply to ??? [2007-06-22 10:01:55 +0000 UTC]
A very detailed and interesting read
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Danelaw [2007-06-22 09:43:25 +0000 UTC]
I se more and more of devart guides every day,
and it is a great addition for the community.
After reading this then looking at some peoples comments... '"lollers gg on dd"'
I understand how much some people may need this.
Great work, it realy deserves the dd.
Keep it up!
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bnext [2007-06-22 07:38:05 +0000 UTC]
Thanks for the advice I think I do it already but I can always improve myself at giving comments..
Anyway I think that everyone should say whats on his mind when he look at some deviation..we just need to say true things. The thing we really think about when we see the deviation.
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MultiCultureFruit [2007-06-17 07:11:47 +0000 UTC]
Really well put together. Thank you for putting your time into it.
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Isorropia [2007-06-04 08:33:45 +0000 UTC]
It's clear you've put a lot of thought into writing this piece. The setout is quite nice, and the bold/italic really draw attention to specific points. The acronym also gives the concept ease of remembrance. The repetition of ideas and suggestion help to cement the ideas and values of a good response in the mind of the reader. All relevant points appear to be covered in the analysis of a comment on a deviation, and are quite helpful in thinking of how to respond to critique.
However, I think the issue could have been addressed more of when people happen to just be completely out of their mind, and post a comment that only uses the deviation as an excuse to attack the artist and boost their own ego, without even considering the value of the piece. It is somewhat covered in 'Is it actually relevant', but I believe this doesn't reflect the malice that may be contained in some comments.
For the next time, you may wish to try using a few less exclamation marks. While they add emphasis and familiarity, with too much use they can lose their impact. Possibly try using a few rhetorical questions in the future. That more or less sums up my comment to this piece, and I dearly hope I receive a response of the same level this deviation encourages.
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ExplosionAnomaly In reply to Isorropia [2007-06-22 17:28:05 +0000 UTC]
Another excellent thing they did with this guide was putting the writing into the description. That would allow for easy c& to another area for easy reference to certain parts. Perhaps I should do that in some of my guides that I never make.
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Isorropia In reply to Isorropia [2007-06-04 12:15:21 +0000 UTC]
Hmm......when I say rhetorical questions, make that answer out loud questions.
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